Perception filter

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A perception filter was a telepathic effect which misdirected the senses around itself or the person using it.

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Perception filters had the effect of directing attention away from the object or its bearer, rendering them unnoticeable. Martha Jones described the effect on the viewer: "You know it's there, but you don't want to know it's there". (TV: The Sound of Drums) It could also "trick" the memory. (TV: The Lodger) Any inconsistencies would be forgotten. (TV: Night Terrors)

Particularly intelligent people were immune to the effects of perception filters. (TV: Human Nature) Once a person became aware of a perception filter and the object it was disguising, they could no longer be affected. (TV: Utopia, Everything Changes) Perception filters did not work on people who were not native to that time. (PROSE: The Lions of Trafalgar)

Several perception filters were created using items associated with the TARDIS, or even created by the TARDIS itself.

The Tenth Doctor was able to construct a perception filter around three keys to the TARDIS, activated when they were worn around the neck on a chain. These keys had previously belonged to Martha Jones, Jack Harkness and the Doctor himself, and enabled the three of them to travel around London safely while they were on Britain's Most Wanted list. While they were eventually detected by the Master, when Martha escaped she was able to continue to use the TARDIS key's perception filter to travel the world unhindered during the Year That Never Was, spreading a message about the Doctor. (TV: Last of the Time Lords)

The fob watches associated with the Chameleon Arch also had their own perception filters, although in this case the filter acted only on the watch itself, making even its wearer unaware of its importance. Both the Tenth Doctor and the Master perceived their watches as "broken" while in human form. (TV: Human Nature, Utopia)

The Saturnyns, led by Rosanna Calvierri, possessed a different type of perception filter when in Venice in the 16th century. These perception filters were in the form of an electronic device worn at the waist. Rather than preventing the Saturnyns from being observed, this filter caused anyone looking at them to perceive them as human, even providing clothing. However, it did not disguise mirror images, leading the human brain (and the Doctor's) to initially see no reflection when they were unable to process what they saw. Amy Pond broke Rosanna's perception filter by kicking her in the side where the device was and Rosanna was stuck looking human even after removing the device. (TV: The Vampires of Venice)

In 2010, 79B Aickman Road used a perception filter, not only to disguise the ship as the top floor of a house, but to alter people's memories into believing it had always been there, and, when the ship was destroyed, it would seem as though it was never there. (TV: The Lodger)

The Tenza were capable of producing powerful perception filters shortly after birth. One, who took the name George, used a perception filter to alter his adoptive parents' memories, causing them to forget they could not conceive and believe he was their biological son. (TV: Night Terrors)

The first mention of a perception filter in a Doctor Who-related story was in the first episode of Torchwood, Everything Changes. The concept was subsequently used in Doctor Who proper.

The Doctor Who Confidential accompaniment for Human Nature suggests that Timothy Latimer, the boy who was immune to the perception filter, was a genetic mutant born with an extra piece in his brain. The final script makes no mention of this, although the Doctor does note that he has an extra telepathic synapse in his brain, accounting for his strange abilities. (CON: Alter Ego)

The series has yet to establish when the perception filter was installed or activated in the TARDIS for the first time. The earliest known reference to the TARDIS possessing one occurs in AUDIO: The Architects of History, meaning it must have been installed sometime prior.

The perception filter is very similar to the "Someone Else's Problem field", as mentioned in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy books by former Doctor Who writer and story editor Douglas Adams. In fact, the novel in which it is first mentioned, Life, the Universe and Everything, was, originally, supposed to be a serial of Doctor Who, Doctor Who and the Krikkitmen, but was turned down.